For nearly two decades, DASL has run one of Freetown's premier digital-skills computer labs, providing hundreds of young Sierra Leoneans with access to technology education. But power outages and rising fuel costs have forced us to close on Fridays and cut daily power by 2 hours. This solar project eliminates our diesel generator, restores full programming, and powers student learning reliably - for the next 20 years.
Hundreds of Freetown students depend on DASL's computer lab for digital skills that unlock employment and opportunity - skills unavailable anywhere else nearby. But rising fuel costs have forced us to suspend Fridays, shut the generator down 2 hours daily, and watch students lose work mid-class during power transitions. At $1,000+/month in generator costs, every fuel dollar is a dollar stolen from students. Without solar, this education - and these futures - remain at risk.
Installing solar power eliminates dependence on the generator entirely - restoring Friday sessions, ending daily shutdowns, and ensuring classes run without interruption. Hundreds of students regain full access to digital skills training that leads to real employment and entrepreneurship. Operating costs drop dramatically, freeing resources for more students and better programs. With a 20-year system lifespan, this single investment powers technology education
Over the next 20 years, this solar system will power thousands of students through digital skills training that feeds into Sierra Leone's growing technology economy. As operating costs drop, DASL expands programs, grows scholarships, and deepens community reach. A solar-powered lab signals to partners, funders, and government that sustainable, tech-forward education is possible in West Africa - modeling what community-centered digital training can look like across the region.
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